How do you know either action is "easy"? Have you done it? I would like to know. A moving target, at night, with a poor distance estimate, against no background?
Since you don’t want to use projectiles in most cases because of the risk to people on the ground, you can use other methods. The three preferred methods are an anti drone laser, an anti drone EM weapon and a kamikazi drone. We have all three available. We have small kamikazi drones and large kamikazi drones. The latter ones can handle any speed drone. Check out Anduril Roadrunner.
You still don't get away from the liability and danger problems of a stricken drone crashing on houses, vehicles, or people. That doesn't go away by invoking fancy technology.
That is true. You can compare the drone coordinates to what is on the ground. There is software for that, but not that hard to do manually. And the odds of actually hitting a person is incredibly low.
It is easy to track them to their landing location or shoot them down. But they are doing neither.
How do you know either action is "easy"? Have you done it? I would like to know. A moving target, at night, with a poor distance estimate, against no background?
Since you don’t want to use projectiles in most cases because of the risk to people on the ground, you can use other methods. The three preferred methods are an anti drone laser, an anti drone EM weapon and a kamikazi drone. We have all three available. We have small kamikazi drones and large kamikazi drones. The latter ones can handle any speed drone. Check out Anduril Roadrunner.
You still don't get away from the liability and danger problems of a stricken drone crashing on houses, vehicles, or people. That doesn't go away by invoking fancy technology.
That is true. You can compare the drone coordinates to what is on the ground. There is software for that, but not that hard to do manually. And the odds of actually hitting a person is incredibly low.